Often seen as the chief feed service online, FeedBurner has apparently finished moving all of their data upon Google’s servers.

So what does that mean for bloggers? It means that your “handy dandy” FeedBurner account will now be able to meld with the “Google collective.”

(FeedBurner Blog) In the coming weeks, upon visiting www.feedburner.com, selected publishers will have the opportunity to sign in using their Google Account and experience FeedBurner, now as part of the Google.

If you are among these merry few who migrate early you won’t see many changes at first. In fact, you might find yourself saying, “my, it’s awfully quiet in here. Almost…too quiet.” (But it may look a bit Googlier around the edges.) Your feeds should continue to hum along as they did before, and all of your settings will be yours to manage through your new or existing Google account. This is the same shiny Google account you use to sign into other services at Google.

It will be interesting to see whether or not users will have the option of maintaining their FeedBurner accounts apart from Google’s system. Either way, FeedBurner’s integration with Google will hopefully mean more features down the road, as many bloggers have been dying to sign up with their FAN Network.

What about experimental feeds? I “burn” the feed results of my Yahoo Pipes, in order to plugin the feed into another web service (such as mytimelines.com). I’m really hoping they don’t view that as scraping, especially since I’m setting up popurls-like research sites.